The National - News

M&A Merger of Omani banks creates country’s second largest lender

- SARMAD KHAN

The merger of Bank Dhofar and National Bank of Oman will create a lender that will account for 25 per cent of the aggregate banking assets and Oman’s loans market, according to a research report.

The merged entity, with $20 billion (Dh74bn) in combined assets, will be the second-largest financial institutio­n in the country, behind Bank Muscat, EFG Hermes said in a report.

Bank Muscat currently accounts for 36 per cent each of the banking assets and loans market in the country.

Last month, Bank Dhofar and NBO said their boards have agreed to discuss a potential merger and a deal will be subject to obtaining “final approval from respective boards, shareholde­rs, stakeholde­rs and regulators”.

Neither bank gave details about the timeline for the tieup or how they intend to structure the possible transactio­n.

“Given the weak macro in Oman, we believe the merger makes sense and would lead to cost synergies and funding cost optimisati­on,” said Rajae Aadel, an analyst at EFG Hermes Middle East and North Africa research team.

According to internatio­nal benchmarks, the cost synergies are typically equal to 30 per cent of the target entity’s cost base. Given that NBO and Bank Dhofar have a smaller retail distributi­on network, EFG estimated that synergies in this merger will only be 25 per cent of NBO’s cost base.

Banks in the Arabian Gulf are increasing­ly looking to merge in a bid to gain scale to cope with tougher operating conditions as low oil prices in the past three years have squeezed their profit margins.

Regional banks are set to see a stronger performanc­e this year as macroecono­mic conditions improve and demand for credit grows, according to analysts.

Both the banks have four common shareholde­rs. The Civil Services Pension Fund, Ministry of Defence Pension Fund, State General Reserve Fund and Public Authority for Social Insurance hold collective­ly a 28 per cent stake in Bank Dhofar and 29 per cent of NBO.

The Egyptian investment bank said that the merger deal is likely to be executed through a stock market transactio­n.

“We believe this will be done via a share swap [as in previous GCC mergers],” the bank said. “We estimate a 1:1 swap ratio [based on 52-week average share price] and given Bank Dhofar’s larger market cap, we believe it will likely absorb NBO.”

 ??  ?? The merger of National Bank of Oman, above, with Bank Dhofar will be subject to shareholde­rs’ approval Bloomberg
The merger of National Bank of Oman, above, with Bank Dhofar will be subject to shareholde­rs’ approval Bloomberg

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